[Napoleon the Little by Victor Hugo]@TWC D-Link book
Napoleon the Little

BOOK IV
22/39

At all events, Charlet was innocent of that death; the officer was killed by a bullet, and Charlet had no weapon but a sharpened file.
Charlet would not recognize as a lawful court the body of men who pretended to sit in judgment on him.

He said to them: "You are no judges; where is the law?
The law is on my side." He refused to answer them.
Questioned on the subject of the officer's death, he could have cleared up the whole matter by a single word; but to descend to an explanation would, to a certain extent, have been a recognition of the tribunal.

He did not choose to recognize it, so he held his peace.
These men condemned him to die, "according to the usual mode of criminal executions." The sentence pronounced, he seemed to have been forgotten; days, weeks, months elapsed.

Everybody about the prison said to Charlet, "You are safe." On the 29th of June, at break of day, the town of Belley saw a mournful sight.

The scaffold had risen from the earth during the night, and stood in the middle of the public square.
The people accosted one another, pale as death, and asked: "Have you seen what there is in the square ?"--"Yes."-- "Whom is it for ?" It was for Charlet.
The sentence of death had been referred to M.Bonaparte, it had slumbered a long time at the Elysee; there was other business to attend to; but one fine morning, after a lapse of seven months, all the world having forgotten the conflict at Seyssel, the slain custom-house officer, and Charlet himself, M.Bonaparte, wanting most likely to insert some event between the festival of the 10th of May and the festival of the 15th of August, signed the warrant for the execution.
On the 29th of June, therefore, only a few days ago, Charlet was removed from his prison.


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